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John Lennon film brings London festival to an end
Thu Oct 29, 2009 9:56am EDT
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By Mike Collett-White
LONDON (Reuters) - The London film festival closes on Thursday with the world premiere of "Nowhere Boy," about John Lennon's rebellious teenage years and his torrid relationship with his aunt and mother before the Beatles were formed.
The directorial debut of video artist Sam Taylor-Wood, the movie stars Aaron Johnson as an angry, confused Lennon who struggles to understand why his mother Julia left him with his aunt Mimi when he was a small boy.
The film plays on the contrast between his "buttoned-up," straight-laced aunt, played by Kristin Scott Thomas, and his fun-loving mother (Anne-Marie Duff) who encourages him to listen to rock'n'roll and teaches him the banjo.
Asked how reliable her account of the star's troubled youth was, Taylor-Wood told BBC Radio:
"There are often versions of truth. Maybe if you'd spoken to Mimi she'd have had one version and Julia, his mother, would have had another version. So as much as possible I think it's pretty close."
She also confessed that tackling a subject as revered as Lennon in her first feature film was daunting.
"I think I went into it fairly naively," said the 42-year-old.
"It wasn't really until I spent a lot of time in Liverpool and walking around that it started to dawn on me the magnitude of the subject matter I'd taken on. And there were moments when I thought, 'I just can't handle this, this is too big.'"
DEBT TO MINGHELLA
The script was written by Matt Greenhalgh, who won acclaim for his screenplay for another rock biopic "Control," about the life and death of Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis.
Greenhalgh said he went to Liverpool in northern England and visited the area where Lennon grew up as well as St. Peter's Church Hall where he famously first met Paul McCartney.
His story traces the formative months of The Beatles and ends with the band about to leave for Hamburg, an early step on their way to becoming the most successful pop act in history.
"It's always nice to think of characters as kids because you can actually create them -- it doesn't come with too much baggage," Greenhalgh said in production notes for the film.
Taylor-Wood, best known for her video installations and a string of celebrity subjects and friends, switched to film with the encouragement of the late director Anthony Minghella.
"He gave me the confidence because he genuinely believed I could do it and told me so," she said. Continued...
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